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Blunt Cerebrovascular Injury in the Elderly With Traumatic Cervical Spine Injuries: Results of a Retrospective Multi-Center Study of 1512 Cases in Japan.

Authors :
Suzuki, Hidenori
Funaba, Masahiro
Imajo, Yasuaki
Yokogawa, Noriaki
Sasagawa, Takeshi
Ando, Kei
Nakashima, Hiroaki
Segi, Naoki
Funayama, Toru
Eto, Fumihiko
Watanabe, Kota
Yamane, Junichi
Furuya, Takeo
Nakajima, Hideaki
Hasegawa, Tomohiko
Terashima, Yoshinori
Ikegami, Shota
Inoue, Gen
Kaito, Takashi
Kato, Satoshi
Source :
Journal of Neurotrauma. Jun2023, Vol. 40 Issue 11/12, p1164-1172. 9p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

This study is nationwide retrospective multi-center study to investigate the incidence and characteristics of blunt cerebrovascular injury (BCVI) in elderly Japanese patients with traumatic cervical spine injuries (CSI) including spinal cord injury (SCI) without major bone injury. The study enrolled 1512 patients (average age: 75.8 ± 6.9 years; 1007 males, 505 females) from 33 nationwide institutions, and 391 (26%) of the participants had digital subtraction angiography and/or computed tomography angiography. Fifty-three patients were diagnosed as having BCVI by angiography. We assessed neurological evaluation, comorbidities and classification of CSI in the elderly patients with/without BCVI and collected 6-month follow-up data on treatment, complications, and patient outcome. We also statistically analyzed the relative risk (RR) and relationship between BCVI and other factors. Significant differences were identified between BCVI (+) (n = 53) and (–) (n = 1459) patients with American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale (ASIA) A, C, D, cervical fracture, C3-7 injury level (AO type F and/or C), cervical dislocation, spinal surgery for CSI, tetraplegia type of SCI, and/or head injury. Fifty-three (3.5%) elderly patients had CSI complicated by BCVI including 10 (19%) cases of Denver grade I, four (7%) of grade II, 1 (2%) of grade III, 29 (55%) of grade IV, and nine (17%) of grade V. Sixteen cases were treated by interventional radiology. Rates of mortality and brain infarction from BCVI were 0.13% and 0.40%, respectively. RR of BCVI was significantly higher in the elderly cervical injury patients with head injury, severe neurological deficit, ASIA A (RR: 4.33), cervical fracture at the C3-7 level (RR: 7.39), and cervical dislocation at the C1-6 level (RR: 3.06-7.18). In conclusion, 53 (3.5%) elderly patients were complicated with BCVI. BCVI more frequently complicated head injury, severe neurological deficit (ASIA A or tetraplegia), AO type F, and/or C fractures and cervical dislocation in these patients. Six patients (11%) suffered brain infarction and two patients died from BCVI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08977151
Volume :
40
Issue :
11/12
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurotrauma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164082352
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2022.0180